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The raw Lac called "Sticklac" is harvested from tree trunks and branches. The lac is then cleaned and processed into a variety of different forms including industrial shellac, food grade shellac (Ex. jelly beans) and even that stinky goo we use to finish old furniture. Yes, Shellac is non-toxic and is approved for use in food by the FDA. More here. and Here.
It was Edison that first used Shellac to make his recording cylinders, it was an innovation that followed had wax cylinders. Record gooves cut into shellac survived playback much better than wax as you might imagine. But this has been a decade of rapid media change...
During WWI, demand was high among the homesick troops for music from America. As a result special 12 and 16 inch radio transcription records playing at 33 1/3 were shipped to special army DJs and POWs in order to boost morale. They contained both important troop information and top hits of the day, often recorded free of charge by big artists such as Glenn Miller and the Andrews Sisters. These were called "V-discs." The "V" stands for Victory.
Shellac is brittle and V-discs often arrived cracked or broken, and as Japan invaded Asia the source of shellac, the Lac beetle of South Asia, became scarce. Shellac discs also had undesirable technical shortfalls: the playing time discs was limited to 10 minutes per side. With shellac there was a groove density limitation of about 80 per inch, more than that risked the groove walls collapsing. And making discs larger than 16 inches to increase playtime was just unfeasible. A new medium was needed! Enter a Polyvinyl Chloride also called PVC or more commonly... vinyl. (more on that tomorrow...)
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